William Clyde Gibson, III v. State of Indiana

CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 2019
Docket22S00-1601-PD-00009, 22S00-1608-PD-00411
StatusPublished

This text of William Clyde Gibson, III v. State of Indiana (William Clyde Gibson, III v. State of Indiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William Clyde Gibson, III v. State of Indiana, (Ind. 2019).

Opinion

FILED Oct 24 2019, 10:43 am

CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court

IN THE

Indiana Supreme Court Supreme Court Case Nos. 22S00-1601-PD-00009, 22S00-1608-PD-00411

William Clyde Gibson, III Appellant (Defendant)

–v–

State of Indiana Appellee (Plaintiff)

Argued: January 10, 2019 | Decided: October 24, 2019

Appeal from the Floyd County Superior Court, No. 22D01-1606-PC-4 The Honorable Susan L. Orth

Appeal from the Floyd County Superior Court, 22D01-1703-PC-4 The Honorable Susan L. Orth

On Direct Appeal

Opinion by Justice Massa Chief Justice Rush, Justice David, and Justice Goff concur. Justice Slaughter not participating. Massa, Justice.

William Clyde Gibson, III was convicted of and sentenced to death for the brutal murders of Christine Whitis and Stephanie Kirk. After this Court affirmed those convictions, Gibson, alleging ineffective assistance of counsel, unsuccessfully petitioned for post-conviction relief. Finding Gibson’s arguments unpersuasive and largely unsupported by the record, we now affirm the post-conviction court’s denial of relief. We also hold that Gibson’s conflict-of-interest claim falls under our standard Strickland analysis for prejudice, not the presumption-of-prejudice standard under Cuyler v. Sullivan.

Facts and Procedural History

Victims, Murders, and Arrest

In March 2012, William Gibson invited Stephanie Kirk to his home, where, in an extended attack, he brutally strangled her to death and sexually assaulted her corpse. Gibson hid her naked and broken body in his garage overnight, burying her the next day in a shallow grave in his backyard. The following month, Gibson invited to his home his late mother’s best friend, 75-year-old Christine Whitis. As with Kirk, Gibson violently strangled Whitis to death and sexually abused her corpse. He then dragged her nude and lifeless body to the garage, where he severed one of her breasts before leaving for a night out drinking at the bars. The following day, Gibson’s sisters contacted police after discovering Whitis’s body. That same evening, police arrested Gibson after a brief car chase, forcibly removing him from the vehicle when he refused to exit on his

Indiana Supreme Court | Case Nos. 22S00-1601-PD-00009, 22S00-1608-PD-00411 | Oct. 24, 2019 Page 2 of 40 own. A later search of the vehicle revealed Whitis’s severed breast lying in the center console. 1

Investigation, Confessions, Charges, and Appointment of Defense Counsel

While in custody, Gibson repeatedly asked to speak with police, expressly waiving his Miranda rights each time. On April 20, the day after his arrest, Gibson confessed to killing Whitis. He also confessed to killing Karen Hodella, a woman whose murder had gone unsolved since police had found her decomposed body in early 2003.

In subsequent interviews—on April 23, 24, and 26—Gibson confessed to murdering Kirk (who, at the time, police did not yet know was dead) and told police where to find her body in his back yard. Arriving there, investigators found Kirk’s prescription drugs inside Gibson’s home and, as with Whitis, found her corpse with a broken back.

The State charged Gibson with Whitis’s and Hodella’s murders on April 24. That same day, the court appointed J. Patrick Biggs, the Chief Public Defender of Floyd County, as Gibson’s defense counsel. The public defender’s office, however, wouldn’t formally receive the order of appointment for another three days. But on April 26, after receiving direct notice from the New Albany Police Department, Biggs met with Gibson, advising him, “in the very strongest possible language,” to remain silent and to stop talking with police. PCR Tr. Vol. I, p.15. Biggs also told Gibson that he could be facing the death penalty for his crimes. Gibson signed a special advisement and waiver form after the trial court advised him of the potential consequences for speaking with police.

1Our citations to the briefings and to the record are as follows: “GI” refers to State v. Gibson, No. 22D01-1204-MR-919, the case in which Gibson was convicted for killing Christine Whitis. “GII” denotes State v. Gibson, No. 22D01-1205-MR-1145, the case in which Gibson was convicted for killing Stephanie Kirk. “DA” refers to the direct appeal materials for a particular case. And “PCR” indicates citations to the record in the present post-conviction proceedings.

Indiana Supreme Court | Case Nos. 22S00-1601-PD-00009, 22S00-1608-PD-00411 | Oct. 24, 2019 Page 3 of 40 Nearly a month later, on May 23 the State charged Gibson with Kirk’s murder, filed separate death-penalty requests for the murders of Whitis and Kirk, and refiled Hodella’s murder under a separate cause number. In late June of that year, the trial court ordered a competency evaluation after Gibson attempted suicide in jail. In October, the court heard evidence and found Gibson competent to stand trial.

Trials, Pleas, Convictions, and Sentencing

Gibson first stood trial in October 2013 for Whitis’s murder (Gibson I). Following his conviction, the jury deliberated on four aggravators during the penalty phase: two forms of criminal deviate conduct, dismemberment, and his probation status at the time of the crime. See I.C. § 35-50-2-9(b)(1)(D) (2007) (criminal deviate conduct); I.C. § 35-50-2- 9(b)(10) (2007) (dismemberment); I.C. § 35-50-2-9(b)(9)(C) (2007) (probation status). The jury unanimously recommended a death sentence, and the trial court sentenced Gibson accordingly in November (withholding judgment on the jury’s habitual-offender finding in view of the death sentence). On direct appeal, this Court affirmed Gibson’s conviction and sentence for the Whitis murder. Gibson v. State, 43 N.E.3d 231, 242 (Ind. 2015).

Gibson’s trial for the murder of Karen Hodella was originally set for October 2014. But in March of that year, he agreed to plead guilty in exchange for a 65-year sentence in lieu of the death penalty. The State also agreed not to use the Hodella murder or conviction as a death-penalty aggravator in the pending Kirk case. See I.C. § 35-50-2-9(b)(8) (enabling the State to seek the death penalty for murder by alleging at least one of several enumerated aggravators, including the defendant’s commission of “another murder, at any time, regardless of whether the defendant has been convicted of that other murder”). The trial court accepted the plea agreement and, in April 2014, entered judgment of conviction and sentenced Gibson accordingly.

Finally, Gibson stood trial for Kirk’s murder in early June 2014 (Gibson II). The day after jury selection began, the defense team discussed the State’s proposal for a guilty plea and a penalty decision by the court

Indiana Supreme Court | Case Nos. 22S00-1601-PD-00009, 22S00-1608-PD-00411 | Oct. 24, 2019 Page 4 of 40 without a jury in exchange for dismissal of a habitual-offender allegation. Gibson accepted his counsel’s advice to plead guilty and to “take his chances with the Judge.” PCR Tr. Vol. I, p.74. At the penalty-phase hearing, the State presented four aggravators: conviction of the Whitis murder, the same two forms of criminal deviate conduct as with Whitis, and his probation status at the time of the murder. The trial court sentenced Gibson to death in August 2014, which this Court affirmed on direct appeal. Gibson v. State, 51 N.E.3d 204, 216 (Ind. 2016).

Post-Conviction Proceedings and Appeals

Gibson petitioned for post-conviction relief in all three cases, arguing ineffective assistance of counsel (IAC). At a consolidated hearing, three witnesses—a psychiatrist, Gibson’s former attorney, and Gibson’s ex- wife—testified in support of the defense’s mitigation theory that Gibson had sustained a traumatic brain injury in a 1991 car crash, an injury which exacerbated his mental-health and substance-abuse problems.

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William Clyde Gibson, III v. State of Indiana, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-clyde-gibson-iii-v-state-of-indiana-ind-2019.